Tim Cullen, the Democrat who ran the state Senate in the 1980s as its majority leader and who returned to the Senate in 2011 only to discover that the minority party has no power, has a theory: New campaign-finance laws will turn the Legislature’s four party leaders into dictators.

In his new book, Ringside Seat, Cullen says the power-broker roles played by those four leaders – Assembly speaker, Senate majority leader and minority-party leaders in both houses – have grown over the last 10 years.

But new campaign-finance rules, passed by Republican legislators and about to be signed into law by GOP Gov. Scott Walker, will make those four leaders “enormously more powerful than in the past,” Cullen warned last week.

Because of changes over the last decade, Cullen says in his book, the four leaders now back one candidate in a primary over others, encourage special-interest groups to support that candidate, and – if he or she is elected – make sure those new lawmakers know who they owe for their victories.

The Janesville Democrat describes that power shift this way in his book: “In the primaries and for sure in the general election, the state Legislature started to see what I call the ‘centralization of legislative campaigns’ by legislative leaders. Leadership began to identify people to send to districts to run them or help run campaigns and would raise the funds to pay them.

“Under this centralization, legislative leaders now (with party staff help) would develop the campaign theme for the candidates, provide draft press releases, direct polling efforts, etc. Most of all, legislative leaders urge friendly interest groups to give their money where the leaders decide it is needed the most. Little of this was going on the in 1970s.

“The results are obvious. Legislators who get elected through this system are greatly indebted to leadership on their first day in office. Not just because of what leaders have done for them, but also for what the leader can do or refuse to do at re-election time.”

Those re-election cycles prompt Cullen’s warning that new campaign-finance laws will empower the four leaders to tell their party’s legislators how to vote, or else. To understand why, remember that the Legislature’s four party leaders alone control the four legislative campaign committees (LCCs). They operate independently from individual candidates’ committees, political action committees (PACs), political parties and third-party independent groups.

LCCs have very basic, hardball goals: Make sure their party’s legislators get re-elected, and elect more of them to claim – or keep – control of that house. LCCs, however, have had “very little money” since the 1970s, he notes, which limited their power. But, Cullen predicts, new campaign-finance laws will make legislative campaign committees much bigger political players because:

There are no limits on what individuals can contribute to LCCs.

PACs may contribute up to $12,000 in a calendar year to LCCs.

For the first time, LCCs will be able to set up “segregated” accounts that can receive donations of up to $12,000 per calendar year from corporations, associations, labor organizations or Indian tribes. LCCs cannot use funds from segregated accounts to contribute to candidates or run “express advocacy” ads that ask voters to support or reject specific candidates, however.

All this means that the new LCCs will now be able to “raise literally unlimited amounts of money,” Cullen says. And, when you add that new fund-raising clout of LCCs to the “centralization” of power accumulated by the four leaders over the last 10 years, they will be able to threaten candidates and members of their own party in new, dangerous ways, he adds.

Cullen knows a thing or two about power. Some called him the “prince of darkness” (a nickname he hates) back when he was senate majority leader before leaving the legislature in 1987 to run the state Health and Social Services Department. Cullen says these new threats from legislative leaders will sound like this:

“’I want your vote when I ask for it, or I have millions to finance your primary opponent, which I will find if I have to.’ Or, ‘Stick with me all the time and this money will be available for you’.”

And in a Legislature where all but 25 of the 132 seats are considered safely in the control of one party, what are the two words legislators most fear? “Primary opponent.”

5 thoughts on “The State of Politics: Legislative Leaders Could Soon Be Dictators”

walker wears his religion on his sleeve and touts his Eagle Scout upbringing,but in reality he will screw you out of your last penny if it will further his political career. He denies healthcare to our most vulnerable citizens, denied the expansion of Internet service to rural communities, denied the expansion of rail infrastructure in Wisconsin, denies homes to Syrian refugees, and drastically cuts funding to K12 and UW education. Walker is despicable and evil. He only answers to his money bosses.

Amazing. When the Democrats were in the majority, the Republicans made the same claims but it fell on deaf ears. I remember the says of Tony Earl. I remember the days of Diamond Jim Doyle. Suck it up buttercup, this is life in a purple states. One minute, your the king, the next pauper. As far as money bosses, that would be Trumpka and his bands of union followers. Do you really think those 14 senators were smart enough to escape the capital on their own? Do you really think Mark Miller or his staff were capable of writing his speech? They used words he didn’t even know or how to pronounce them. Talk about union bosses and big money….

As far as the other nonsense comments, Wisconsin was failing under the ultra left and their ultra spending. Health care for our most vulnerable? This from a Democrat who supports spending over $900 billion on welfare programs for illegal aliens while reducing spending at the VA. Rail? Really? I work in heavy industry. Rail is a huge money loser. Every time it’s brought up, you folks whine about Europe and how great it is there. You do know, in Europe, what Germany, France, Spain and Italy spend on their high speed rail alone is more than our entire budget for the Department of Transportation. If you want to spend it, where do we cut first? As far as refugees, I was in Somalia. I’ve delivered food and water to real refugees. Their generally women and children who are starving. I’ve never seen so many healthy, well fed demanding refugees in all my life. They’re not refugees. Not sure what they really are but they’re not helpless or harmless. Walker would do well to prevent their settlement here.

Meanwhile, 4 years straight now of a significantly decreasing property tax bill, on top of increasing home valuation. I certainly remember the Doyle years, where my property taxes would increase year after year after year…. turns out the cure was simply responsible fiscal management at both the state and local government levels.

Thank you, Governor Walker. I look forward to supporting you again if you choose to run in the next election cycle.

Some people ask me why I criss-cross the state each spring, speaking to hundreds of college students studying to be teachers. The article itself, and the comments following by JimTheRepublican and WashCoRepub are the reasons why I spend my own gas and time showing these bright,, young idealistic students that they have absolutely NO future if they stay in Walker’s Wisconsin to begin their teaching careers and live their lives in Walker’s Wisconsin.

Every time I get an email from one of the 20-somethings that I have talked to at some college campus during the past 3 years telling me that they are teaching in Minnesota, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, or starting their lives in some other state across America, I am so happy that my efforts have saved another young person and their future family from the cesspool of hatred that Walker and his loyal Republican followers have turned Wisconsin into.

And yes, soon I, too, will be leaving Wisconsin, but not before I convince hundreds, maybe thousands of talented young people to flee the economic catastrophe of the entire Midwest. Smart people escape Walker’s Wisconsin. Everyday.

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